Since I noticed this trend, I am appalled by its pervasiveness. At least half of the women I see are wearing jeans.

Occasionally they are with husbands also clad in blue denim, emphasizing the unisex character of this proletarian garb. Occasionally there is an eldest daughter also wearing blue jeans, already promised to the cult of androgyny.

But usually these women are alone and don't look happy. Often they look angry or lost. Usually they are talking on a cell phone or listening to their ipod.

Men, if you're tempted by such a woman, her jeans are a signal that you may have to deal with "GID" --"gender identity disorder." Her jeans are saying: "I don't want to be a woman. I don't want to look good for men. I fear and distrust men. I want male prerogatives. I want to look like a man. I want to be a man."

Feminism which espoused "women's rights" actually has driven femininity underground, torn the sexes asunder, and stripped woman of recognition for being wives and mothers, roles essential to their own fulfillment, to men, and to children and society.

Man, if jeans are this bad, I wonder what this guy would have to say about the crappy old pair of sweatpants I'm wearing right now...

I actually like being female, and most of the other women I know agree with me on that one. Wanting the same rights as someone else is not the same thing as wanting to be that person. I'd love to have Paris Hilton's money... but there is no way in hell I'd ever want to be her.

And yet these same people would be the first in line to call a woman a slut if the jeans she was wearing were hip-huggers, low-riding, or otherwise tight and attention-drawing.

I'm actually confused by this. He's complaining that women who wear jeans *don't* want to look good for men. Leaving aside the fact that this is obviously untrue, I thought that women weren't supposed to dress in sexually-provocative ways to draw the attention of men?

My jeans say "my ass looks good in these jeans". And if I don't look happy while listening to my iPod, it's probably because some yoyo like Mr Makow is yakking too loudly next to me and I can't hear my music.

I am a man, and I don't own a single pair of jeans. My beautiful fiancee, however, wears them nearly every day. I must say, there is absolutely nothing true about that "I don't want to look good for men" part.

What the hell is "blowzy"? And why do you think that what a woman wears has any bearing on their character, their demeanor, or even the general appearance? Women in jeans are just as feminine as those in skirts. Come...come into the 20th century...I assure you, the process will be painless, and maybe, in time, you eventually catch up with the rest of society, and become a fully functional member of 2ist century America. But no promises...

Since I noticed this trend, I am appalled by its pervasiveness. At least half of the women I see are wearing jeans.

O NOES! Not jeans!

Occasionally they are with husbands also clad in blue denim,

So?

emphasizing the unisex character of this proletarian garb.

O NOES! I guess you'll have to be against t-shirts and necklaces too.

Occasionally there is an eldest daughter also wearing blue jeans, already promised to the cult of androgyny.

Uh, huh?

But usually these women are alone and don't look happy. Often they look angry or lost.

O RLY?

Usually they are talking on a cell phone or listening to their ipod.

So?

Men, if you're tempted by such a woman, her jeans are a signal that you may have to deal with "GID" --"gender identity disorder."

An where did you get your doctorate?

Her jeans are saying: "I don't want to be a woman. I don't want to look good for men.

Bull-fucking-shit. I know plenty of sexy women in jeans.

I fear and distrust men. I want male prerogatives. I want to look like a man. I want to be a man."

O RLY? And you know this how?

Feminism which espoused "women's rights" actually has driven femininity underground, torn the sexes asunder, and stripped woman of recognition for being wives and mothers, roles essential to their own fulfillment, to men, and to children and society.